M. F. p. 249.
Nor will I press his (Des-Cartes) discharging all spirits from place, though that seems consequentially to dis∣charge them from being.
See Dr. More's first Dialogue, p. 136. &c.
M. F.
Nor will I dwell upon his disbanding all Final Causes out of the precincts of Na∣tural Philosophy.
Dr. More ibid. Preface.
A third property of his Phi∣losophy is a seeming modesty in declining all search into the final causes of the Phaenomena of the World.—
M. F. ibid. p. 250.
His attempting to prove, that all the Phaenomena of the Universe might arise out of matter by meer mechanical motion, and that matter a∣lone, supposing such a degree of motion communicated to it—could have produced the Sun, Moon, Stars, Planets, Animals, and the Bodies of Men in such Organization, Order, Beauty and Harmo∣ny, as now they are.
Dr. More ibid.
It is a confessed principle with him, that matter alone with such a degree of motion, as is supposed now in the Universe, will produce all the Phaenome∣na of the World, Sun, Moon, and Stars, Air, Water, Earth, Planets, Animals, and the Bo∣dies of men, in such order and orginazation, as they are found.
M. F. ibid
Neither will I dwell upon his notion of the Conflict be∣tween the Flesh and the Spi∣rit, which the Scripture so emphatically mentions; namely, that it is nothing but the repugnancy of those mo∣tions,